Abuse survivor tells her journey

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The month of April has been designated as National Sexual Abuse Awareness Month.

For one Bureau County woman, that awareness needs to be shared in order to protect the children of Bureau County from strangers, acquaintances and, as in her case, from family members.

As she tells her story, that woman, “Sue,” has asked to remain anonymous to protect her family.

For Sue, the sexual abuse in her family began with verbal and emotional abuse and then escalated.

Sue had been married about a month when her husband became physically and verbally abusive. He would throw things at her, grab her, shove her, punch her.

“I was always walking on eggshells,” Sue said. “I was always trying not to cause pressure on him, and he was very good at being manipulative and playing mind games.”

Though the marriage was a struggle, in time, children were born to the couple.

Before long, her husband expanded his scope of anger toward not just her, but to their children. The sexual abuse against their daughter started when she was still a preschooler and continued until Sue removed her children from the home.

On the outside, her husband was well-respected in the community and active in his church. He worked full time. But within the marriage, she lived in constant scrutiny and fear for the lives of her children and herself.

After several years of abuse, Sue and her children fled their home and went to the Freedom House domestic shelter in Princeton for help. It was through Freedom House that Sue learned to recognize the signs of sexual abuse, signs which the Freedom House staff immediately saw in Sue’s daughter.

Her daughter had a sexual knowledge that she shouldn’t have known at that age. She would lift her skirt; she would touch her breasts. She became withdrawn. She would tuck her head into her mom’s shoulder and not want to look at others. She didn’t want to be put down.

As she looked back on the past few years, Sue realized the signs of sexual abuse were present in her daughter, but Sue hadn’t known what they represented.

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